The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, June 03, 1920, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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PAGE TwO UME NECESSARY IN AGRICULTURE Declares W.M. Goodman Who Points Out Method For ; Storing Product. Knoxvillo, Tenn.? In a bu'lotin issued by tho Michigan Agricultural College on lime and its uses and functions in soils, the statements are made that "lime was used more than 3,000 years ago in parts of Europe to improve soils." and that "in some of our V.astern States 'iming has been practiced sir.ee the earlier stages of the agritultiral developments and its use has gradually spread until it. is added to the soil to a i?renter or loss cxt at as far westward as the regi n of lip; .ter precipitat ion." Lime was used on fauns of the South more tliaa <*,"ft..* yoais ago, and w-ih excell. ni res ult , hut only in re en' years ha? it- value in soil and crop improvement wo'i; became generally known. Dr. K. A. Morgan, piesi lent of the U nvorsity of Tennessee, and one of our most eminent agricultural authorities, says: "The heavy annual rainfall of the S 'litii leaches the soil of lime to such an ex'eat that clover.-- cannot he satisfactorily grown and indued the yields of no-.r'y all the comm n crops are reduced. An application of two tons of ground limestone per acre once in, say, six years, can bring about astonishing results." Thus we see that the lime needs of sioils are recognized in all sections, and it is plainly apparent that every effort should be male t) supply these needs. Some Illustrations. We find in Georgia, the Carol in as and other Southern States fine fields of alfalfa, clover and the grasses "where a few years ago there were galled and gullied hillsides, or sandy VAllo . V\ <"w 1 4,1 4 ' ovuo mi|#vvci UMICII lljr I'U'tlU CUll I Vet' tion, and upon inquiry, learn that in every case the change was brought about through the use of agricultural limestone which made legume raising possible. Such object lessons in a county show what can be done with the soils of the vvh >lo county and of all c. unties in these States. With clover and the grasses?good hay fields and permanent pasture.}? cattle raising can he made to doub'e the farm incomes of the S,uth, and the production of such forage cropmeans the improvement and conservation of sc-il fertility and l-.rger yields of other crops that follow. The use of agricultural limestone for the improvement of soils an 1 crops would be more general if arrangements were made for storing this material in bins or warehouses at convenient prints. The farmer who can buy and handle pulverized limestone, a-, ship ped by car loa ?s, cannot alwavs get the material when need?sl on account of car shortage or other difficulties which delay shipments, while others are deterred from supplying the liime needs of their soils because of - their inability to use lartfo quantirosycbeek iMBr e(J? star-eyed a 11 d full of the beauteous F vigor of sweet, young W maidenhood, require the V utmost care from wise and watchful mothers. There I comes a time when nature I m u s t be assisted. And I such a time calls for I #9PI ft A ftftlMAB duiuiiw "the old doctor's prescription" that has helped thou-, j sands of suffering women j for half a century. Sold by your druggist, and if the FIRST BOTrLE doesn't help, ask for your I money hack and the drug-^ m gist will pay it. rn Tiacheb Medicine Co. Chattanooga, Tenn., U. 8. A. SOUTH IS TURNING AGAINST CALOMEL i i ? Mr. Dodson, the "Liver Tone" Man, Responsible for Change for the Better. Cvevy druggist in town has notice.1 a groat falling off in the sale of calomel. They all give the same reason. Dodson's Liver Tone is taking its 1> lace. "Calomel is dangerous an 1 people know it." Dodson's Liver Tone is per scr.a'ly guaranteed by every druggist \ i .. . 1 iii i ...?i \ mi Mt'ii.s ii. .^v large nuiue (ioo.su i cost v?r\ much but if it fads to give \v y relief in every ease of liver slug T 1 no. s and constipation, just ask .oi youi money back. ' -d.i i.V Liver Tone is a pi ra:: anttasting. jar- ly v yeta' le remedy, ' a nil l os s to both children and adults. Take a spaonfu' at night and wake up !' e'ipg line; no bi!i u it s:;, sick bead one. avid stomach or constipated bowels. It doesn't ''rip - or cause in( nvenion e all the next day like violent valomel. Tain a dose of calomel to-lay and tomorrow you will feel w< ak, sick and nauseated. Don't lose a day.? adv (f?) ties at one time. L\a:np es Set by Oilier States The building of limestone bin.- a' railway stations has solved the prob lem in some sections of Illinois Ohio and Virginia. The plan followj ed in these States enables the farmer coming to town with a wag n or truck load of produce to haul a loa 1 of limestone back to his farm instead of returning with an empty j vehicle, and thus supply his needs at little expense in time and labor. Limestone associations have been formed by farmers in a number of counties in Illinois to encourage the use of limestone and for having it stored in bins or warehouses for the benefit of members and the general public. The expense of erecting bins and the employment of selling agents is naid out of dues collected from members. | This plan might he adopted "with profit by farmers of any section of the Southeast, but other arrangements could be made which would enable them to proccure the material as needed, and business men could join the farmers in this work with the certainty of sharing in the benefits to be derived from the advancement cf general farming mtm*ests. Where it is not thought advisable to build limestone bins arlengemonts could bo made for storing the material in warehouses or cheaply constructed sheds. T.io main point is to have pulverized limestone available at all times, so that the small farmer can get any amount he wants at any time an 1 haul it to his farm when it i-. convenient for him to do so. Important to Peanut f*ro>vers. Just now the need for having lime stone available for use on Southern farms is rendered more urgent for the reason that lime is necessary in growing peanuts, the most valuablo crop now produced in boll weevil sections of the cotton belt. The plant I ... . ers of Virginia. the StjLt.o which ranks third in poanut production and whore this crop has been grown com | mercially since the Civil W ar, conI sider lime very necessary in peanut soils. A bulletin issued by the Vir ginia Agricultural Erperimont Stai tion states that "peanut soils should | be limed once ir. four years with 1,000 pounds of burnt lime, or 2,000 pounds of ground limestone and | 200 or 400 pounds of acid phosphate should be applied in the rows at the time of planting the crop." I)r. W. I W. hong, director of extension, C'cm | son Agricultural College of South Carolina, says: "It is necessai*y to lime soil for peanuts unless it is definitely known that there is an abundance in the soil. In this State at least 1.000 pounds of burnt lime or 2,o0u pounds of ground lime.-tone i should be used per acre. This will ! apply to most of the peanut soils j of the Southeast, and shows the necessity of having lime stored where it can he procured without delay and in quantities required hy large and inail growers. Th(i li'.i !? / >- u of *?/ ?' * r? ii 4 Mil' ?'*?. Mil ,1.) W| |" -UIUV UT^ 111^ j alone is of such importance to the ! South at this, time as to call for the '? nited action of business men and i farmcs in making available for im; mediate needs a material which must I ho used in order to produce profit^ able ei on.-. K. 0. Hanson spent several days n this c unty last week. ??o \V\ H. IJo it-vn \\*a. i . C rwr.y i,n^ j day re e My. % THE HORRY HERALD, OOHWj ROBBERY IN BERLIN ' RAPIDLY INCREASES Berlin.?In these disturbed days, when the "revolution profiteer"? the successor of the war profiteer? flaunts his newly acquired wealth in the fact of an impoverished popuj lace, robberies and burglaiics in j Berlin increase at an abnormal pace. Si'ieet signs arc full of ani'.ou'.l. cr.u r.ts offciing rewards for the stolen goods, and in cne of the main business streets of Berlin a goods store displays this notice: j "Gentlemen burglars are requested not to break open the shop front nor to tamper with the locks. There is , nothing to steal here. All property j is removed from the shop windows at night." i ncre have boon scores of hold j ups, and the other day a man was j .-tripped of his clothes, shoes and hat j an 1 left on the sidewalk in his un j devdoth.es. I It is not safe for hotel guests t> h ave any portable prt perty of any iU intion in their rooi s. A iicle of clothing have a wa\ < f vanisl in;; [ iiilo i.hin air, and hotel prop! ietors <'>c ine all respon ability. lY/lir i statistics indi ate that the num' e , i ' hotel robboi ies has trebled witli in the last five yoavs. i To leave typewriters unpadiocked is sheer culpable negligent* > on the ( part of the owner. The Berlin crun i .e.' oolice has been obliged to crgnr 'z * a special department dealing exclusively with stolen machines. Ca es of housebreaking have quadluphd within the last three years.' Articles of clothing, bedclothes, car-! pets and cm tains are the objects j most desired by the thieving frator- I nity. | Dishonesty among the factory hands has grown to a deplorable extent, the police say. Leather belting disappears wholesale; it is cut up and sold to shoe repairers. Nor are churches, cemeteries and museums immune from robberies, the booty carried off being mostly !inpii>nt ov?lfl nrnampnfc nrwl iou- olr\' 1 0V4V* X/*?.V.?..V.4VU M,"> JV?? Vi. J . j W^A. AAAA^/^^^A^A^VAAA^MSAAAAA % GOG has more imitations than any other Chill and Fever Tonic o.i the market, but no one wants imitations. They are dangerous things in the medicine line.?adv. I 11 We are no\ i to serve our o!c ability. Just dr invite your insp orv/ oto VI J y VlUt If its nails Or on A plow or Just J If its a Rai We hi Paints and You v Or maybe With A mattress Just ( I And so if i I You v I Our clerks I And s | Wc have T Tabor I B 1-4 Pfldtf P. v.s*) ^ - -re* .-.r-xvxgr^ &Y, S. C., JUNE 3, 1920. COPY SUMMONS FOR RELIEF. (Complaint Served.) Coarl of Common Pleas. f STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, ' County of Horry. J. W. Carter Company, A Corpora- * tion, Plaintiff 11 vs. 1 J. E. Harbour, Defendant. ? TO THE DEFENDANT ABOVE NAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the complaint in this action, of which a copy is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber at his office at Conway, S. C., within twenty days after the j service hereof; exclusive of lh^ day i of such sendee; and if you fail to! answer the complaint within the | time aforesaid, the plaintiff in t is action will apply to the Court fo the relief demanded in the complaint. Dated April 24th, A. D. 1920. 111 H. H. WOODWAIil), Plaintiff's Attorney. TO J. K. HARBOUR, ABSENT DP jj FENDANT: j I TAKE NOTICE That the Com-' J plaint in the foregoing stated action 0 and the Summons of which the fore- ' / going is a copy were filed in the h office of the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas in and for Horry ? County, at Conway, S. C., on the j 3 29th day of April A. D. 1920. 1 \ W. L. Bit VAN, (L. S.) fe C. C. C. P. ? H. H. WOODWARD, R Plaintiff's Attornev. Gained Tei Bcjore Taking ZIRON, Ah Nervous, Nad No Ad veil i : _ EVERY man and woman, who Is In 1 a run-down, weak condition, with ( bad complexion and poor appe- j tlte, due to lack of iron in their blood, should find Zlron helpful and strength- ( building. 1 It is a scientific, reconstructive tonic, i composed of ingredients recommended by leading medical authorities. j Describing his experience with Ziron, t Mr. George W. S. Lanier writes from ^ Jones, Ala.: "Sometime back, I was in e a terrible condition. I was weak and i nervous, and had a tired feeling all the time. My skin was muddy. I e n in our New Store on Fifth Strt ) customers and new ones to th< op in and look over our Hardwj ection of our Furniture, Kitcher you need to build a House, ly trap to catch a mouse: a hoe or any H ardware, live us a call, you will find them nge you want of the finest kind, ave the best all Copper-Lined; pans and pyrex-ware; i/ill always be sure to find them you need a bed room suit, a couple nice porch chairs to-bo i of cotton or f elt or hair; Jon't forget we have them here. ts only to rest awhile, vill find at our store a welcomi are ready to serve you too, how you cur s; ock fresh and nev 'obacco Flues r eady for delivery Respectfully, hardware Co TABOR, N. C. Not Appreciated. Mr. Pester?Ah, honey! You are ;till worth your weight in gold to no. His Wife?I think you're perfectly ion i<l. You told me that years ago, md everything has gone up frightu!!y since then.?Exchange. fliCH BENEFITS^ | There is not a single reason I S why you should deny yourself I the benefits of rich, nourishing I Scott's Emulsion I Far better than alcoholic! ft tonics or medicines, every a | drop of Scott's contributes! j? to strength and better health.! jtscott it flownc, Bloom Held, N. J. ^i?iti??>iMiflr S. M. Cook was among the great umber of farmers who spent some ime here last week. flXIOTE f.C!0ITY] | k at the bottom of most ! p digestive ills, I i'i J 10 ^ for indigestion afford pleas| jng and prompt relief from ; S the distress of acid-dyspepsia. 1 fccADE BY SCOTT ft BOWNE [j MAKEUS O* SCOTTS EMULSION fv-meaxmami una i Pounds i i ibama Man Was Weak, 'te, But is Now Strong. ! lad no appetite, and at morning I' lidn't feel like getting up. I was eading of Ziron and decided I would ry It . . . "Will say that Zlron Is a good medl:ine. I have gained ten pounds in our months. Am strong and have a rood appetite." Zlron is a mild iron tonic, good for roung and old. rt helps to restore he system, when run-down by over* vork, under-nourishment, caused by itomach or bowel disorders, or as eeult of some weakening illness. Get Ziron from your druggist. He sells it on a money-back guarantee ?????? NT | ?et arid ready ; best of our ire. We also i-ware, Crock I ! i I i i i I t 0 I here. i ; ! | i ' * I I here. ot; ? I ? 1 I ng smile; i \i. ! '] * i i mpany I A'lLLIAM EUGENE KING, M D Physician and Surgeon Office in Piatt Drug Oo. 4YN0R,. ... S.0L OR. J. D. THOMAS Physician and Surgeon loris. s. o. no a \ iciuio Mill Will LLKIO DENTAL SURGEON Ufico Norton Druf fiipiii CONWAY, 8. C. D. A. SPIVEY & CO. W. B. King, Secty. SONDS AND INSURANCE ?Office in? PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK BUILDING HARRELSON & HARRELSON iUtorneys-at-Law t'raciicc both in the State and I'otlerai Courts. WIULLINS, ? ? S. 0. H. H. WUOUWASDt .Attorney and ('oimacllor at Lev^ CONWAY, 8 ~ H. B. SCAUBOUOUGH Attorney at Law, CONWAY. S. U T. R. LEWIS, Atty. and Counc.ellor at Law ;ONWAY. . - - s. a J J. M.JOHNSON, CIVIL ENGINEER MARION, S. 0. %Iy Engineering and Surveying >ffice will be open during my abtunce, and prepared to take care >f any work as usual. Addreat dJ communications as bereto ore. S. C. DUSENBURY Attorney-at-Law . "'ii Spivey Building "1 CONWAY, ? S. O. SEND ALL YOUR v REPAIR WORK BLACKSMITHING SAW HAMMERING ACETYLENE WELDING AUTOMOBILE REPAIRING ?TO? CONWAY IRON WORKS Milton Fittman, (Lessee). 4; 22 20?tf. No Worms In a Healthy Chiio All children tronbled with worms have an uo* healthy color, which indicates poor blood, and as a rule, there it more or less stomach disturbance. GROVE S TASTELESS chill TONIC given regularly * for two or three weeks will enrich the blood, improve the digestion, and act as a General Strengthening Tonic to the whole system. Nature will then ..irow off or dispel tho worms, and the Child will be in .'-erfect he*Uh. Pleasant to take. 60c per bottle NOTICE TOBACCO GROWERS. I For tobacco barn fives call on Sasser Company, Inc. i Gurlcy, South Carolina. We manufacture the best flues made, file your order with us immediately.?adv 111 {29. 6 11109, N. T. Collins was in Conway the latter part of last week. ?? o? There were crowds at the Pastime last week. ?o TINS ONLY AT youa GROCERS [MAXWELL MOUSE j COFFEE , ?